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Our articles are all original copyrighted works by various authors.  Permission has been granted for our use of them.  You may gain permission to reprint from the individual or through this site.

 

Articles and Checklists for Parents and Kids

Static Discharge--This article could save your life.
The Dangers of Chlorine is a spring and summer article must read.

Does your child have the "Edison Trait"?

Homeschooling Answers What you need to know about homeschooling before you start.

 

Teach Reading The Easy Way  A great article with many resources.

Most Recent articles:

Here is a great series to read then send on to anyone curious (or other) about Homeschooling.  All the negatives and positive are addressed.  Email this url ( http://www.4homeschool.info/4hsnewsletter.htm ) and they can subscribe above.  
HOMESCHOOL-IS IT FOR YOUR KIDS?
Homeschooling: It's not what you think
-Can you learn everything at home?
Illinois Homeschool Family Dragged Into Court
Homeschool Graduates Considered ‘Preferred Enlistees’ In Armed Forces.
Study: Group Seeks to Add One-Million Students to Homeschool Roles

Yearning to fly 
Homeschooling requires dedication from parents
Continued Growth of Homeschooling Creates Questions for Many 

Educate Yourself on Teaching Kids at Home-Dr. Brian Ray of the National Home Education Research Institute said, "I estimate there were 35,000 to 46,000 K-12 homeschool students in Tennessee.

Caring hands aided evacuee pets
Do homeschooling guidelines in some states violate church/state

Home versus school
Homeschooling: Exploring the reasons, finding the tools
Homeschoolers Protected by New Utah Law
Old Fashioned Learning With New Fangled Technology
Adds Depth to Homeschooling Experience
Local teen wins back-to-back art contests

Port Huron parents question district's funding

Homeschool your kids and save the planet!
Homeschooled students do well in spelling, geography bees
Putting the family to work
Parent's take hands-on role in homeschooling
Robotic fun and games
Rapidly Growing Homeschool Trend Stimulated by New Internet Tools

 

ARCHIVES
8 e-mail mistakes that make you look bad
ABCs of home education
ACLU: View Homosexual Film or School District Will Be Taken to Court!
ADHD drug pulled in Canada, stays in U.S.
A Home-Grown Success: Inside the Home-School Coup

A laboratory in the living room
All About Advocacy
Alternate schooling gets local boost
Animals help to teach 'life lessons'
News Release: May 06, 2006-Homeschoolers Applaud "Anthony and the Magic Picture Frame"
APS Investigates kindergarten 'sexual harassment'
Arizona Families Gain Important New Protections

At home with Christ-
Baptists stay in school
Baptist Urges Baptist Urges Homeschooling
Back to HOME school
BAD Law outcome in Vermont- homeschoolers
BHS' Neher gets Boettcher award Lauren Neher
Bills endangering homeschoolers
Booster Seat Basics
Brain in a Box could be hit
Bush Administration Celebrates Charter School Week
California-breathing a sigh of relief
California member caught in truancy sweep
Candidate wants to bring change Daily Mail - Charleston, WV - May 5, 2006
Can Florida Residents Get Free PC's to Homeschool?
Carolyn Kimmerling wanted to try home-schooling her reluctant learner
Checklists for child-care and household safety
College students spend winter break as substitute teachers
Conventions-homeschool parents come face-to-face with many others
Creating a class of their own
Curriculum Standards 1-2
Curriculum Standards 3-4
Cyberschools provide online courses
Deduction for Educator Expenses
Department of Education: Stop recruiting our children to Islam 
District sees too few students
Does Homeschooling Pay Off?

Driving by Example
Education official concerned about homeschooling popularity
Family lessons
Finally, homeschooling gets a good rap

F
ish and toxins New warning
Fixing FERPA: Protect Homeschoolers' Privacy

Flight from Public Schools
Focus on: Education HS kids Have Unfair Advantage?
Food Stuffs Fit For a King at a pauper's price!
Four local students named National Merit semifinalists
Going on the Offense
Guarding Our Liberty
Hard Studies, Soft Studies
Harkleroad's moment-PARIS
Hawai'i's gifted students struggling to adjust
Heads of Their Class
Hendersonville couple retires to floating home
Higher Pass Rates on I-STEP Reflect Curriculum Changes 
High-tech homeschool Program helps kids
Home-based educators stand up for right to decide how to raise their children
Homeschool Band Organizers Meet To Outline Lessons
Homeschool dads no longer content to sit on sidelines

Home-schooled student-athletes
Homeschoolers dominant in annual reading competition
Homeschoolers earn Math Olympiad awards
Homeschoolers' hearing postponed
Homeschoolers in the trenches 
Homeschool girls enter and win Beauty Contests
Homeschooling hard work Times Community Newspapers of Greater Dayton, OH - May 5, 2006
Home school group gives sitcom failing grade
Homeschool to college
Homeschooling Answers What you need to know before you start.
Homeschooling child can be fulfilling
Home schooling finds foothold but not official favor
HomeSchooling in the Kitchen
Homeschooling on the Rise  
Homeschooling make gains among Southern Baptists   
Home-school: Parents give their children an education
Homeschool parents not happy about regulations
Homeschool Rules Proposal Triggers Protest!
Home Schooled sisters, won the U. of Florida's annual "Read to Win" contest
Homeschool Team Wins BEST Robotics Competition 
Home schooled teen wins title after intense spelling contest.
HomeSchoolers Find Intact Dinosaur!
Homeschoolers get robotic workout
Homeschoolers should play ball
Homeschoolers Seeking College Admission and Financial Aid
HomeSchoolers Speak Out to School Educators!

Home Schooling Expands Around the Globe
Homeschooling Failure?

Homeschooling families join forces
Homeschooling: The kids are all right
Home school science fair shocks audience  
Homeschooling Under Fire in 2005 Legislative Sessions

House Bill 5744: An Act Raising the Compulsory Attendance Age
How Do You Really If Your Child's School Is Safe?
How To Start Home Schooling
How will you pay for College?
Idiots at the chalkboard  

In-house education: Tailored tutelage
Internet Safety
Interview with a Home Schooler
Introducing the Timeline For All Time!
Introducing Virginia Republican Gov. George Fitch
It's time to face it-homeschoolers need computers.
Law Adding Burdensome Regulations on Homeschoolers

Learning a lesson in fairness
Legislative Counsel 1462: Home Education Equity Bill
Life Provides Our Curriculum
Maintaining Sanity
Many choose homeschooling over public schools for protection

"Mean Girls" relying too much on cliches 
More Problems in Kentucky
More than 100 attend prayer Peoria Journal Star, IL - May 5, 2006
NASA-Eastern New Mexico University-summer Mountain Science Camp
Need for a search warrant trips social workers
Neglect charges threatened!
Official cites Miss. homeschool program as too lenient
Ohio Newspaper Accuses Homeschooling
Our daughter should be allowed to walk in graduation
Parents square off on schools
Parent-taught Driver Education Moves Forward in Virginia

Parents Fight Governments to Homeschool
Parents, not schools, must teach kids to read
Pharaoh's chariots found in Red Sea?
Penn.-Bill would let homeschoolers participate in extracurricular activities
Practical Homeschooling: Part 4  Portfolio Review and/or Testing

Pregnancy No-Nos
Project takes participants around the world

Programs admit students to world of medical care
Providing Encouragement and Support-State organizations & local support
Public divide
Punting on the pledge-In a decision handed down on June 14
Ready, Set, Go Wild

Real-life experts help you avoid pitfalls
School-hours curfew bill advances
School's in session for our senators
Segregation back in southern schools, study says

Self -Assessment for Teachers
Senate Bill 1013: Teacher
Setbacks and Victories in South Dakota
Home School Legal Defense Association - May 5, 2006

Certification Required for Some 
Simple Concepts That Are Hard To Get
Social factor 

Socialization of homeschoolers
Student expelled for knife
Students grateful for the helping hand
Teacher Tax Deduction Not for Home Schoolers
Teaching Disorders
Teach Reading The Easy Way
Teen and Adolescent Depression
Teen grad accepts success
Teen sage is ‘ Seen and Heard ’
Texas Leg.-Bill Prohibiting College Discrimination of Homeschoolers

The Dangers of Razor Scooters
The Importance of Routines

The Why of Home-school
The Writing on the Wall
There are approximately 2 million home schoolers in the United States
Time for public schools to throw in the towel?
Tolerance Training at its Worst Ever!
Treating Teen Depression

Unit Studies
Universal Mental Health Screening
University model, classical education emerging anew as schooling
Unlawful order requires parents to submit to investigation
Washington Boy, 14, Wins Geographic Bee
What about socialization?
Wild West Homeschooling
Why buy a test kit?

 

Learning a lesson in fairness
The bloodhounds were let loose by Bruce Dennison, regional superintendent of schools for Bureau, Stark and Henry counties. His inquisition squads - a truancy officer and (sometimes) two cops - pounded on doors of 24 homeschool families, demanding attendance and curriculum information.
Read the full story here!

Thank you WorldNetDaily.com for this news.
From WhistleBlower Magazine

'The flight from public schools' WND exposes horrors of government education, explores homeschooling revolutio
n.  Read the entire story here!

Homeschool rules proposal triggers protest
Parents oppose notifying local districts every year
December 4, 2002
About 100 homeschooling parents, some with children in tow, packed a meeting of the state Board of Education yesterday to protest the department's proposal to add "each year" to a requirement that children educated at home be listed with their local public school district. Read the whole story here.| Read the follow-up here

Georgia Chamber Polls State School Superintendent Candidates
There will be a runoff on Tuesday, September 10 between Democrats Barbara Christmas and Joe Martin in the race for State School Superintendent. The winner of the runoff will run against Republican Kathy Cox for the position, which will be decided in the November General Election.  Come read their responses to the poll.

The NEW SAT 2005
The new SAT will be administered for the first time in March 2005.

Dr. Laura supports Dr. Dobson: "Take your kids out of public schools"--When Dr. James Dobson, of Focus on the Family, urged California parents to withdraw their children from the state's public schools, the Alliance for the Separation of School and State was a grateful benefactor. Dr. Dobson's broadcast, heard by 200 million people daily in over 100 countries, sparked latent interest among concerned parents seeking an end to government-controlled schooling.

PERVERTING THE SAT's
The SAT (Scholastic Aptitude Test) has been used by colleges for decades to predict the success of students in college. Colleges have found SATs to be an effective tool in measuring college aptitude, that is, the ability to do college work. Since colleges are interested in admitting those students who will be successful in post-secondary work, the SAT has been one of the most widely used college aptitude tests in the nation.

An aptitude test is different from an achievement test. An achievement test looks at what a student has accomplished. An aptitude test tries to predict what a student will accomplish, that is, graduate successfully from college. An achievement test looks at the past. An aptitude test looks at the future.

Last month the Trustees of the College Board for the SAT voted to change the SAT from an aptitude test to an achievement test ("College Board to Vote on Overhauling SAT I, Adding Writing Section," Minneapolis Star Tribune). The changes are described as "the most significant overhaul in the 76-year history of the nation's most widely used such test." With these changes, the SAT will be redefined as something entirely different from what it has been.   Read more...
PERVERTING THE SAT's

Is this a Death Sentence for Education? 
Charlotte Thomson Iserbyt, former Senior Policy Advisor, U.S. Department of Education, and author, the deliberate dumbing down of america...A Chronolological Paper Trail, 1999, 3rd printing, 2001.
Read her view on this latest insult to educators!

Home School Expedition Uncovers Rare Allosaur and Giant SauropodA dinosaur fossil expedition for home educators sponsored by Vision Forum and Creation Expeditions has excavated a rare, large, intact Allosaurus. Click here to read the full press release

Planning a vacation with the family this year?  Here is a must read that will save you time and money...and lots of hassles!

Planning to Pay For College? Learn some easy ways to make it affordable!

 

How To Start Home Schooling

Know Your State

  • Home schooling is legal in every state in the United States.
  • Obtain information about your state home-schooling laws.
  • One source is your local school district, which can provide a packet of information concerning home schooling, including a synoptic paragraph about legal requirements. Inquiries can be made with no strings attached.
  • Another source of information is your state home-school organization, which can also provide information about home schooling in your state. Other home schoolers can provide you with the proper telephone number.
  • In addition, those interested in home schooling can contact the Home School Legal Defense Association, a national home-school organization that can provide information regarding legal requirements as well as membership in that organization.

Obtain Curriculum   See Requirements

  • Most states expect you to obtain a reliable curriculum, although some states have the authority to approve or disapprove your choice.
  • Many states expect you to teach the academic disciplines such as spelling, handwriting, English, reading, math, science, and history.
  • Most state home-school organizations hold curriculum fairs during the spring or summer.
  • You should purchase basic curriculum first and then add extras such as charts, globes, maps, science kits, manipulatives, and flash cards.
  • You should look for a curriculum with daily lesson plans that take the guesswork out of what you need to teach your child on his grade level.
  • You should purchase curriculum early (possibly 2-3 months before teaching) in order to become familiar with the format and to prepare lesson plans.

Set up your Home School

  • Establish a special place in your home.
  • Equip your teaching area with necessary teacher and student school supplies and resources, including encyclopedias, dictionaries, etc.
  • Use student desks or tables and chairs as well as a chalkboard or marker board.
  • Organize your curriculum and resources in bookshelves.

Record Keeping

  • Many states require a record-keeping system.
  • Store records in a filing system by school year and child.
  • Store samples of your student's work as well as standardized test results.

Organize Time

  • Develop a school schedule based on the number of days your state requires.
  • Consider a year-round schedule vs. a nine-month schedule as well as a daily schedule.
  • Include long-term projects, seasonal activities, ministries, holidays, and vacations in your schedule.
  • Develop a teaching plan based on the number of children you have.

Prepare Lessons

  • Plan at least one week's lessons ahead of time, gather materials for lessons, collecting resources for lessons, preparing visuals, etc.
  • Use a daily lesson plan book for lesson numbers and pages, activities, and student textbook and workbook pages.
  • Review the evening before to refresh your memory and to put materials in place for the next day.

Find Support

  • Attend several meetings to become acquainted with the group and its purposes.
  • Assess group goals and standards to be sure they are in keeping with those you want and have for your family.
  • Inquire of the group or other home schoolers about how to obtain good magazines and helpful newsletters.

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How Do You Really Know Your Child's School Is Safe?
By: Cheli Cerra

Schools are some of the safest places in our nation. As parents, we want all of our children safe. When you walk into a school, what are some visible indicators that you can look for to tell if it is safe? In a school, having the building and the surrounding property clean, well lit, and well maintained promotes a sense of safety and security. If a school is dirty or does not have well-lit corridors, take these indicators as “flags” of caution that security and safety may not be priorities.  If the walkways around the schools are also not well-lit, especially for after-school programs and evening events, there is a chance that individuals could be injured because they might not be able to see where they are walking. Worse yet, someone could come onto school property without being seen and harm the students or the premises.

It is extremely important for schools to control who has access to the campus and its students. Preventing strangers from coming onto the school grounds, who do not have any business being there, is a very important safety priority. Having the school staff, parents, and students know the school rules are a very important safety priority as well. When everyone knows what is expected, there is less of a chance that a problem will happen. An example would be the arrival and dismissal procedures for a school. Dropping off a child at school sounds like an easy task. However, when there are 1500 children and all are being dropped off at the same time, even a simple procedure such as this can create many problems. A safe school addresses the drop off and pick up procedures, as well as other important rules in a parent handbook that is given to all of the students. Does the school that your child attends have a parent handbook where rules are addressed?  A quality school will have a parent handbook that will address, school policy, procedures and rules. When everyone knows the rules, everyone knows what is expected, and there are few, if any, emergencies.

 School safety, however, goes beyond what can be seen on a tour of the school facilities.  For a school to be a safe learning environment, the faculty, staff, students, and parents involved with the school must have safety and security measures in place to handle any type of emergency that might occur.  It is your right to ask questions concerning these regulations, and it is your responsibility to make sure that if they do not exist, that with the help of the entire school community, these plans and procedures are put into place.

 IS YOUR SCHOOL SAFE? AN ESSENTIAL CHECKLIST 

School safety is everyone’s business can you say YES to the following questions?
 
·        The school appears to be clean and hazard-free. (YES/NO)
 
·        The school has a safety coordinator who is responsible for maintaining a safe and healthy environment. (YES/NO) 
·        The school has a “safe” way for students to report a conflict, crime, or crisis (especially if another student might be involved). (YES/NO)
 
·        The school has a crisis prevention plan in place. (YES/NO)
 
·        The school has procedures in place to respond quickly if and when a crisis situation occurs? And, the school has informed parents, teachers, students, and the community what the procedures are. (YES/NO) 
·        The school has a fair and consistent discipline procedure. (YES/NO)
 
·        The school has counselors and psychologists available to students in need. (YES/NO)
 
·        The school involves the community, teachers, students, staff, and parents in these safety efforts. (YES/NO)

 Investigating the answers to these questions will give you a better understanding of your child’s school. 
©2001 Eduville, Inc.

We enjoy the work that Cheli has to offer and hope you will visit her site, Eduville.com Cheli Cerra: The Principal At Your Fingertips™
 
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ALL ABOUT ADVOCACY:
How to be a strong voice in support of your child.
By: Cheli Cerra

As a parent, we must always fight for what is best for our children. In this way, we are their advocates, or representatives, and it is our job to see that all of their needs are being met. At the same time, being an advocate does not necessarily mean that you have to put on your boxing gloves. Instead, it dictates that with a little planning and preparation, your voice can go a long way toward making a difference.

Tips on being a great advocate:

Tip #1:BE INFORMED
Information is the key to your success as an advocate. If you are well-informed, your opinions will be respected. Learn all there is to know. Talk to your child’s teachers, get copies of your child’s records, etc. It is especially important to have all of the facts and figures in writing so that you have physical evidence in support of your point of view. This preparation puts power behind your perspective!

Tip #2: BE PREPARED
Know where you want to go and how you’re going to get there. Basically, as your child’s advocate, have a plan and know what you want to accomplish. Often, parents go into conferences with school staff members knowing what the problem is but not having taken the time to consider a possible solution. It is very important that as your child’s advocate you do your homework on both ends of a conflict. It is not the teacher’s job to have all of the answers. Be prepared--it will save you, and your child’s educators, time and frustration in the long run, and hopefully enable you to work as a team.

Tip #3: BE HONEST
Remember the childhood saying "cheaters never prosper"? In the same way, honesty will get you far and dishonesty will get you nowhere in the field of education. Be prepared to be honest with yourself about your child. For example, it is very hard to come to terms with a child that has a disability, a behavior problem, or some other sort of difficulty. As hard as this type of situation is, it is even harder to handle when we try to deny the fact that the child needs help. However, if you feel that your child has been unfairly labeled as a problem student, it is your responsibility to resolve this problem with the school staff. Being an effective advocate means being honest with the school so that the scope of the problem can be realized and assistance can be provided.

Tip #4: BE PERSISTENT
As your child’s advocate, go with your gut. If you are not comfortable with the way the school is working with you, say it. Do not feel pressured by the "experts" into doing something with your child that you feel is not right. Along the same lines, if you feel your child has a problem, and the school is not addressing it, say so. As a parent, you have valid insight into your child, and if you do not agree with the school’s strategy, chances are that it is not the correct solution for your child.

Tip #5: BE DIPLOMATIC
Diplomacy does not come easy for many. To be your child’s best possible advocate, put aside your anger, if you have some, and focus on the outcome of the situation: your child’s well-being. Working together with the school, in a positive way, will help build a strong educational foundation for your child.

Now that you have some “tips”, who do call when you have a problem? The following list has been put together for you as an example of key personnel at a school. Schools vary in staff from state to state. This list is intended as a guide. You should always make yourself aware of your child’s school staff and their roles.

The Teacher – Your child’s teacher should be the first person you call when you need help. He/She is the person that spends the most time with your child throughout the school day.

The Counselor – The school counselor is an invaluable resource. This is especially true if your concerns are of a sensitive nature. Examples: Divorce, Abuse, Moving to another city/state. Keep in mind that depending on the school, the counselor may not be a full-time employee—although he/she might be available for a telephone consultation, you may need to make an appointment in order to discuss an issue at length.

The Assistant Principal – If your child’s school has an assistant principal/vice principal, this person is the one to call when you feel you need extra help with the school and/or the classroom teacher. In some schools, the assistant principal is also the individual who handles discipline problems as well.

The Principal – The ultimate authority. Always try to go through any of the above school leaders before you call the principal. Directly calling the principal will get you immediate results but the teacher, counselor and/or assistant principal will also most likely be involved in resolving your concerns, so they are your initial contacts.

The Cafeteria/Playground Manager – Is your child having a problem in the cafeteria or at recess? If your school has one, contact the cafeteria/playground manager to resolve the issue. Be sure to follow any discussion up with a call to one of the following school leaders: the teacher, the counselor, or the assistant principal. It is important for them to be informed of any concerns so they can monitor activities throughout the rest of the school day for similar problems.

The AfterSchool Care Manager – Does your child attend before/after care? Do you have concerns about the program? Contact the afterschool care manager directly but again, follow up with a call to one of the following school leaders: the teacher, the counselor, or the assistant principal.

 ©2002, Cheli Cerra

We enjoy the work that Cheli has to offer and hope you will visit her site, Eduville.com Cheli Cerra: The Principal At Your Fingertips™

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Focus on: Education
Home-schooled victors raise concerns
Critics say students have unfair advantage over other pupils

By Jessica Wehrman / Scripps Howard News Service

WASHINGTON -- When home-schooled Rebecca Sealfon won the Scripps Howard National Spelling Bee in 1997, she launched a trend.
Since Sealfon spelled her way to triumph, two other students who have been home-schooled for all or part of their academic careers have followed her to victory.
In 2000, the final three finishers -- winner George Thampy of Maryland Heights, Mo., runner-up Sean Conley of Shakopee, Minn., and third-place finisher Alison Miller of Niskayuna, N.Y., were home-schooled. Conley -- who attended a Minnesota school the next year -- won the bee in 2001.
This year's National Spelling Bee is set for May 29-30 in Washington, D.C.
But with the trend of home-schooled champs -- Thampy was a runner-up in the National Geographic Bee, sponsored by the National Geographic Society -- has come muted criticisms from those who say home-schooled students have the advantage because they can spend more time studying spelling during their school days.
Paul Houston, executive director of the American Association of School Administrators, said that in some instances, home-schooling parents emphasize memorization more than schools do -- another reason home-schoolers have found success in the bee.
Houston said that having a few home-schooled bee champs does not necessarily show the superiority of home-schooling. Saying one child's triumph is evidence of the success of home-schooling, he said, is like saying all North Carolina colleges are good because basketball champion Michael Jordan attended one.
"I think home-schoolers have a lot of things they can point to as successes that are far more important than whether they do well in the spelling bee," he said.
According to Scripps Howard bee rules, students must not eschew normal school activity in favor of preparation for spelling bees. Bee director Paige Kimble admits it's a hard rule to enforce, but "we have never had any single thought or occasion to believe home-schoolers or their parents were being irresponsible about their education."
"You're just talking about the nature of the beast," she said. "Of course that rankles those parents who send their kids off to public and private school. But what's the answer -- it's gross, blatant discrimination to say no home-schooled kids at all."
Kimble said that home-schooled children do have an advantage "in that their time and how it is structured is entirely up to them."
Mona Goldstein knows both sides of the debate. She has four children and three have participated in the National Spelling Bee. The youngest, Amanda, is not old enough to compete.
"I think a lot of it has to do with the kid," she said.
Her oldest child, Amy, who attended a private school, used to refer to studying her spelling as "playing." Her third child, JJ, who will compete at the national bee this year, is more interested in practicing diving. She is home-schooled.
"I don't think she has necessarily studied any more because she's home-schooled," Goldstein said, adding that most parents of bee participants are very involved in their children's education, whether the child attends home school, private school or public school.
About 2 million students across the nation are home-schooled today, and the rate is growing by 15 percent to 20 percent a year, according to Rob Ziegler, a spokesman for the Home School Legal Defense Association in Purcellville, Va. Home-schoolers have been involved in spelling bees for 20 years.
"Home-schooling works because of the great teacher-student ratio, the personal attention, the flexible schedule -- those things can help in any academic area, including spelling," he said, citing triumphs in the geography bee as another example of academic strengths. "It's pretty clear across the board that academically, it works."
Vonnie Crumpton, of the Big Country Home Educators of Abilene, Texas, said the schedule flexibility is one reason home-schooled kids succeed academically. Her son was interested in classical music, and his home-school education allotted him plenty of time to practice.
"Yes, we get math and English and grammar and everything, every day," she said, "but we had more time to dedicate to the talents that God has given him ... that's the beauty of home-schooling. You can spend more time where they have interests."

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